While opening up about her life with a rare condition, a woman born with two vaginas revealed how she still needed to use condoms when she was pregnant.
Evelyn Miller, 31, claims that she used to feel 'anxious' about being intimate but has now fully embraced her body and has turned to OnlyFans and Pornhub in an attempt to educate others and spread awareness.
The Australian mum-of-two was first diagnosed with uterus didelphys in 2011 after a gynaecologist noticed it while examining her at the Women and Children’s Hospital in Adelaide.
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The condition, which affects less than 1 percent of the population, means that Evelyn has a double uterus, two sets of ovaries and two vaginas - and they’re all fully functional.
Evelyn had noticed something was 'wrong' after struggling to insert a tampon 'in the place you’d usually find your vagina' six years previously.
And when she tried to have sex for the first time at the age of 17, she explained that her then-partner's penis 'just kept hitting a wall'. It was later discovered this was because her urethra is 'lower than usual' and her two vaginas are positioned either side of it.
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While previously anxious about opening up to partners about her condition, Evelyn has since learned to embrace it and now earns £12k a week on OnlyFans and Pornhub making videos of partnered and solo sex with sex toys.
"The platform has given me the opportunity to raise awareness of uterus didelphys," she explained. "I get so many women messaging me who have had the worst time with it.
“Some are completely unable to have children, which is heartbreaking. I think I’ve been very lucky there.”
Despite initially worrying her condition would leave her infertile, Evelyn was able to conceive in her right uterus in October 2020 and again in November 2021, sharing son, Andrew, 20 months and daughter Georgia, eight months, with her husband.
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Evelyn added: “There was always a risk I could be pregnant with two babies at the same time. When I was pregnant with one, we’d still have to use condoms if we wanted to have sex in the other vagina.
“There were also complications after I gave birth. Both of my babies were born very small, and needed to spend months in intensive care. Thankfully, they’re both happy and healthy now.”
Evelyn says people are 'really thankful' to see someone being so open about uterus didelphys - and she uses her platform on TikTok to educate people.
“I’m so lucky to have this platform, and I’d encourage any young women to get checked out if they feel like something’s not right,” she said.
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The mum said: “I avoided sex for so long - guys didn’t know what they were doing and they’d just end up slamming their penis against my urethra." Ouch.
“I just didn’t know what was wrong with me," she continued. "I felt so much anxiety around sex - I only lived with my dad at the time, so I didn’t have anyone I could go to and ask privately.
“Google was out of the question - I lived on a remote farm and we literally only had dial-up, so I couldn’t just look my symptoms up on the internet."
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"OnlyFans has helped me to finally embrace my condition. Creating content and having people complexly fascinated by my condition is really great."
Following her diagnosis in 2011, Evelyn was told she had the 'extreme' version of uterus didelphys, meaning that she has two vaginas, each connected to their own cervix, as well as two uteruses and two sets of ovaries.
The long-awaited diagnosis gave Evelyn a new lease and lust for life and she decided to use it to empower herself sexually, setting up an OnlyFans account in 2018 and creating content with her husband, Tom.
Despite starting a marketing business together, they still create explicit content and Evelyn says their success peaked while she was pregnant.
Evelyn admits: “I was always curious about sex work, and sometimes other men are involved, too.
“It doesn’t feel like cheating really - I’ve got one vagina for work and another for play. It’s massively paid off for me, because people are really curious - they love the fact that I’ve got two vaginas.
“It might sound bad to say it, but that can feel incredibly validating."
Topics: Sex and Relationships, Life, Real Life, Health